Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 172, 1 June 1917 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1917,
rHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SON-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday by . Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Foat Office at Richmond, Indiana, at Second Class Mall Matter.
HELP THE RED CROSS
rtoHnr to the tremendous nressure on
military hospitals in France to care for the thonsands of soldiers wounded In the Tiolent fighting now in progress around
Arras and in Champagne, all available
surgical, dressing supplies that can be najwd im twine sent to France from the
workrooms of the New York County Chapter of the American Red Cross. - r How serious the situation abroad is, isAshownby this bulletin that has just been received by the American Red Cross: 4 "For lack of sufficient dressings the wounds of. soldiers on the battlefields of France are now being stopped in many cases with newspapers. Rather tn bleed to death on the battlefield men run the terrible risk of gangrene and other infection." Twenty-two tons of supplies for French and Belgian hospitals an Included in a Red Cross shipment that left an American port a few days ago. Included In this , shipment are 69,000 cans of condensed milk being sent for the relief of undernourished children in the devastated regions of France. Another Red Cross shipment soon to go forward is an entire ambulance unit given by the American Cotton Waste Exchange of Boston. This unit consists of twenty-three automobile ambulances, kitchen traitor-wagons that can be attached to the cars, and the necessary supply trucks. The entire unit will be manned by Americans now abroad. Red Cross Bulletin. :
v Punitive Legislation . i Many newspapers and publishers have accepted t V proposed increases in postal rates as it affects their business as a piece of punitive legislation devised by 'secretaries who are seeking to "got even" with the press because the people of the United States demanded the defeat of the censorship clause of the espionage bill. No newspaper publisher will object to pay his share of the expenses incidental to the great war In whklr we are involved. Few of them, however, can tamely accept legislation that seems to be in the form of punishment desired by department heads in Washington who are peeved because they cannot control newspaper publicity. The people of the United States have a direct
interest in the proposed legislation, as Represen
tative Henry W. Watson of Pennsylvania, pointed out in a recent speech in Congress in which he said; -v.. "Patriotism is as pronounced in the cabin as it is in the palace. Every wage earner will do his
part and pay his share of. the taxes to preserve the tradition of his home and the honor of his country a3 truly and patriotically as the one who
employs him, but I do not believe that the United States should place an additional burden upon their sources of information. f "I am therefore not in accord with the postal rates reported in this bill. They should be amended in order that newspapers in time of war may
be transmitted through the mails to, their sub
scribers in whatever part of roe united states or its Territories they may be domiciled without increased postage. . ' " . v "It is the duty of a government to assist rather than to retard the distribution of news to its subjects wherever they may be. "The President of the United States publishes the State proclamationsthrough the newspapers, and they in turn impart them to the public in many cases the only source of information open for many of our people. "The newspaper arouses " patriotism in the hearts of those where it is dormant and imparts to the world thoughts of a higher and a nobler condition f or mankind. - . , v "Publishing houses should be taxed in harmony with all of the industries of our country but not be compelled to pay excessive toll where others do not. A cheap postal rate effectuates spreading of knowledge, to the people, strengthening those beyond the realms of news, and unifies the policies of the Government." Anti-Conscription Riots The punishment of a deserter is death. The punishment of a man' who foments anti-conscriptions riots ought to be death. There is little dif
ference between the . two crimes, for in either
case, the enemy is receiving encouragement and strngth by the act. The American people are in a war against a powerful nation whose resources in men and munitions are far from being exhausted. The man power of this nation is needed to press a successful outcome of the struggle. Dispatches from the western front say that the man power of France is being exhausted and that American contingents are needed to fill the gaps. A man who will foment anti-conscription riots in the face of these conditions is a traitor to his country and to the cause. The federal government is right in using its full power in crushing manifestations of this kind of disloyalty.. Penitentiary sentences are a mild form of punishment, but they must be inflicted with dispatch and with certainty.
America Given Cordial Welcome Into War by Australian Press
Hershey has been taken to Indianapolis. Conviction of desertion in war time carries a heavy sentence. ?
The new battleship, Mississippi, Is the third one of the same name.
: MELBOURNE, Australia, June 1. 7-aratUcation over the fact that the United States is now actively on the side of Great Britain and her allies In the war is expressed by the newspapers of Australia. "Australians of every class and creed will Join gladly with the people of Great Britain In welcoming America into the pact which binds us to cor gallant European brothers in
saya the Melboore Age. our welcome to America is
r.ot the tea cordial because most of us had all bat despaired until quite
lately that she would ever respond to
the stimuli which have already sent
S 00,000 Australian lads to venture i death tn pursuit of an unsellsh and resplendent ideal on the tortured battie fields of France. Justifies Our Action "America at length has approved
oar cause and justified our action in the rttfvrr unexceptional.' . "That the United States should have decided to Join the Allies in the war is a tremendous event in the history of the world," said the Melbourne Ar-
'.Kus, "It li certainly the most momen itous eveat of the war since the fateful Sdays f August, 1914. It is fitting that a virile nation like the United States should decide to fight in defense of crrHtasilDn. . The United States will prove a strong ally strong in lnflu- , ence and la resources." The Sydney Daily Telegraph, which 1 had frequently shown Impatience with
No (toe Should Have Gray Oair Doat Use Dyes Restore Natural Ootor With Healthful Remedy , Money Bask Guarantee.
Nobody likes to use dangerous, dirty, sticky dies, bat no one wants to have gray hair nowadays. No one needs to. If your hair is gray an over or Just getting . gray or streaked with - gmy or if it is faded out and lifeless simply get a bottle of OBaa Hair dolor Mesons c. This is a harmless liquid, all ready to use. It la guaranteed to the Emit by the 1 makers to give satis fact km or your money back. In a very simple, healthful way it brings back the natural color to gray or faded hair, evenly and gradually (so no one can toll). Simply apply Q-Ban Hair Ootor Restorer like a shampoo and have beautiful, soft lustrous hah tn abends noe and with never again a streak of gray. Ton will be simply delighted with year look of yotxth end vigor. - Remember Q-Ban is not a patent medMne. not a dye. Its work is certainly sate and permanent Only 60 cents at Fine's Drag Store, Richmond. Ind., and all rpod drag stores, or write HeasigRills Drug Co, Memphis, Tens, mentioning druggist's name. Illustrated Interesting book on "Hair CaltsrcV sent free. Try Q-Ban Hair Tonic, Q-Ban Liquid Shampoo. Q-Baa Toilet! Soap, also Q-Ban Depilatory (odorless) for removing superfluous hair. Adv. 1
President Wilson's policy, said: "America at war will devote her colossal strength to clearing the earth of the curse of Prusslanism." Fit Spiritual Ally ... The Sydney Sun, an important evening paper, asserted that "the world may truthfully say of these American cousins of ours that they never went to war in a spirit of mere greed nor with tyrannous ideals set before them. Their history places them spiritually beside the great democracies of France and Britain and opposes them to the German Ideals of military conquent for conquests's sake. f. "Historically America on the battlefield has been 'on the side of the angels,' and once again she fights with the forces. - of freedom and honor against the darker powers of cruelty and tyranny .with which the earth is periodically cursed." "The mere fact .that thenvs people's voice to be heard speaking for modern liberty, is still in the battle has heartened up the whole world," declared the Sydney Bulletin.
DESERTED AFTER WAR HAD BEEN DECLARED
It was ascertained today that Raymond Hershey, a Wayne township young man, arrested yesterday on a charge of army desertion, is charged with having deserted the same day the President signed his proclamation declaring a state of war between the United States and Germany, April 6.
II
Be popular clear your skin with
Resinol
Soap
trees' a pimply, unattractive
skin shut you off from admiration and pleasant associations ? Each time yon cleanse your face with Resinol Soap you give it a "beauty treatment" with the soothing, healing Resinol medication. I f aided, in severe cases, ' by a little Resinol Ointment, this usually leaves the complexion naturally clear and fresh. All draggUti tell Reainol Soap tad Ointment. For sample of each, free, writ to Dept. IMC, Reainol. Baltimore, Md.
REVIEWING MARINE CORPS
i OMRS!
The
double-service tooth paste
keeps teeth clean AND GUMS HEALTHY.
Keeping the gums healthy and the mouth sweet Is very Important to health; more teeth are lost through the loosening of the tissue that holds the teeth In place than from decay. Dental science to-day demands that a tooth paste must keep the gums healthy as well as dean the teeth. '..7 Senraco was formulated to meet this requirement. Hundreds of dentists are prescribing and using Senreco because they have found that it does measure up to that standard. ... SENRECO IS A WONDERFUL CLEANSER. h addlrien rn&a properties Senraco is a wonderful cleanser; acts directly on the mucin film, the basis of tartar; leaves the mouth cool and cleaa-feettng. As some one has expressed it Senreco gives ones new Get a tube to-day at your drugfiets or toilet counter enjoy the healthy, cleanly feeUng its use gives your mouth and gams. Notice hew brilliantly white Senreco makes your teeth. It performs this two-fold service for you and yet oasts no more than the ordinary old-tmshioned tooth paste that simply cleans the teeth and Waves a pleasant taste 25 cent; for a large t ounce tube. ' . ;
1 W 9mmmmmKmtl "rorpipy sir S'tpM mm - jZ I " 'V' ".- m . & A "V Of i4X$M-
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Major-Gcneral George Barnett, Commandant of the United States Marine Corps, and Secretary of the Navy Daniels in the reviewing stand at. Washington during a parade of new marine recruits. A regiment of marines, 2,600 Rtrong, will be among the first division of United States troops to be sent to France.
JUDGE TO APPOINT . COUNTY DEFENSE BOARD
Judge Fox this morning received a letter from government authorities asking that a County Defense Council be formed here to co-operate with the National and State Defense Councils. This council is to consist of seven
members to be appointed by the court One woman and a representative of labor are to be members of this council. Judge Fox will consider the matter, and make appointments in the near future.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY
MOTMEISS
A woman desires to remain healthy and to retain her good looks after giving birth to her child. . Women who go through the period of expectancy with the least strain and
suffering are those who prepare their system in advance of baby's coming. "Mother's Friend" is prepared to give the mother-to-be that direct and immediate help she needs. The muscles expand easier. The breasts are kept in good con
dition. The system is prepared and the crisis is one of much less, danger. Three generations of women have used "Mother's Friend.' They say they would not go through the period of expectancy without it. Every aid that may be given the expectant mother should be rendered her. Your husband will srladlv
get "Mother's Friend" for yon from the druggist. Write for free book. Merely address Bradfield Regulator Company,
uept. A, Z05 Atlanta, ua.
AMERICAN OFFERS -PRIZE TO GUNNERS " ; WHO SINK U BOATS MICE, June 1. if. C. Barol ai American resident here, has given U6r 000 francs to the ministry of marine as prizes for officers and gunners on merchantmen who sink submarines. . The money, la to be distributed in prises of 6,000 francs. .
The wind and high water In a little creek near Terre Haute swept a large number of fish upon the shore. They were taken to the court house and sold for 7 cents a pound.
Appetite Finicily and Fussy? Tempt it with a light, nutritious food that helps you to shake off the shackels of a Winter diet Eat Shredied Wbsst Ehcstt with berries and cream or milk. Two or three of these Biscuits with fruits and green vegetables make a nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of a lew cents. Ready to-eat no cookery, no kitchen worry.
Mado at ISscara
Folk, It. Yw
Don't
the Blue Tag Spring Clean Out Sale at Hirsch's Cash Price Credit Store beginning . Tomorrow morning. Look up last night's full page advertisement.
Mrseb's 15-17 No. 9th
HERE'S PROOF
A Richmond Cltfssrt Tslls ef His : Expsrisnest ,
You- have a right - to doubt statemsnts of people living far away but can you doubt Richmond endorsement? Read Hi ' - - v X W, S. Henderson, 100 N. Nineteenth St, Richmond, says! "About three years ago I was in pretty bad shape from my back and kidneys. Several times I got down and could not do anything on account of the sharp pains in the small of my back. The kidney secretions were too frequent In passage, causing me to get up as many as ten or twelve times at night. The secretions were also highly colored. Doctors said I had lumbago. After I had used many medicines without being helped, I got Doan'o Kidney Pills. I used three boxes and they cured me." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that cured Mr. Henderson. Foster-Milburu Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
9
Uc&Jciui
Protect Year Porch Floors . Porch floors and steps ro " cdve harder wear than any other surface about the house.
PORCH
FLOOR PAINT will keep them looking well and protected against wear and weather. Made especially for outside floors. . Sold ready . for use in cans of convenient size. Ask for color card. .
; Hancr d Fahlsing Painters and Decorators
423 Main St. Phone 1336
1maim Wm nfaui . c.
li
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II
A High Standard Made HigherStill
Were they so disposed, Dodge Brothers could not lower the quality of this car. They are no longer free agents, because public opinion has established a standard for everything bearing their name. - They dare not fall below the high estimate that has been formed of them as motor car manufacturers. The American people are quick to detect deterioration. And what is much more important they expect the constant improvement of any product in which they repose complete confidence. They would be slower to forgive a fault in any car Dodge Brothers might build, than in one they esteemed less highly. Every dealer in Dodge Brothers cars knows that the customers who come to him, come with the highest possible expectations. He knows that the thing he is selling primarily is Dodge Brothers word and their good name. He knows that he' is not merely dealing in motor cars, but acting as custodian for Dodge Brothers reputation.
Naturally, this knowledge of what is expected by the buyer breeds a deep sense of responsibility. In the Works, it has the effect of inspiring Dodge Brothers to a constant personal oversight of all of the manufacturing operations. Their own life -long zeal for good) workmanship is sharpened and stim j ulated by a realization of what the i public expects from them. The entire institution is honestly per-1 meated with the idea that quality: and performance are paramount and all-important. And so, a standard which was naturally high, has been made higher still, by the bestowal of complete confidence on the part of the public. It is a mutual contract which offers constant inspiration to the manufacturer and constant insurance to the customer. .: With the interests of buyer and seller so closely knit together, the result, everywhere, is what might have been expected., - It is impossible , for Dodge Brothers, with all their great facilities, to build enough motor cars to satisfy the public.
It will pay you to riii us and examine this ear
'1211 MAIN STREET
Tearing Car er Roadster, $83S ' Winter Touring Cat or Roadster, $1000, Sodaa or Coupe, $1285 '.. . All prfeM ; o. , Detroit
PHONE 2328
The caaotifee eontanaptiea b vaamuOy tow "The tira mileage ia anasnaPy high .;
